The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 23, 1922, Page 2

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' PAGE TWO WOULD MAKE | DUCK SHOOTING SEASON LATER Several Bismarck Sportsmen Discuss Question of Going Before Legislature i Several Bismarck sportsmen al- | ready have begun to discuss the mat- | ter of.going before the next legisla- ture to ask that the open season for duck ‘shooting be opened on Oct- | ober 1 instead of September 16. Be cause of scarcity or difficulty hunt: ers have had shooting prairie chick- | ens hundreds of hunters have turned i to duck shooting and they hav been slaughtered by the thousands, according to local sportsmen. This | has resulted in young ducks being killed in large numbers. Most hunt- | ers have been able to get their limit jn ducks at this tme of the year. | The local sportsmen also maintain | ‘that. the ducks are not generally | killed for eating this early in the|N, Y., secretary for boys’ work season but are killed simply for the | the Yi M. C A. in Smyrna, purpose of bagging game. {reached Athens in safety. He A. K. JENNINGS of Cleveland, as de- Many experienced hunters reported | clares the Y. M. C. A, buiding was unusual difficulty in getting prairie | not destroyed by the blaze that chickens the first week out. The ex- | ravaged Smyrna. :planation by one hunter was that the weather sent the chickens into hiding, but in the last few days with warmer weather they are said | to have been more numerous. Developing New | Type of Air Map Washington, Sept. 21—A new type of map to guide aviators who declare the present system of maps/ for air work is not complete, is! being prepared by the National Ad- | visory Committee ror Aeronautics. The new type is characterized for its extreme simplicity, only features of the Terrain being included, to- gether with better indication of land- ing fields with such’ information as a pilot especially needs when forced to land. The first of these maps, that of the air route between Langley Field, Virginia, to Washington, has just been made public, It is ba8ed | upon a simple hydrographic map of | the territory between the two’ points, Only those landmarks. which are visible to fliers at some height and easily recognized, are shown. They include, islands, | FIVE LEADING FIGURES IN TURKISH CRISIS | SULTAN MEHMET VI will be’ren-]| dered more thoroughly powerless than he is at present if Mustapha Kemal Pasha occupies Constantinople. Nevertheless the sovereign attends public thanksgiving services in_hon- or of Kemal’s victories. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE f of staff to asha, ‘Turkish Na- tionalist leader, is the. real head of the victorious Turkish’ army that has ocetipied the whole ‘coast. of Asi Minor and now. threatens Co! to me: ‘Then go dig another hole, an’ throw the dirt in that. ”- : aeele As a special featuse, Manager Rob- bins presented some “news”. movies of several years back; showing: views of, President Wilsons. 20> > + The crowd‘broke into Joud applause when his picture flashed on : the screen. One man even so far. forgot the dfess-suit and evening-gown sur- roundings as to give vert-to a wild yell. yi ” ate , Wilson’ accepted the tribute silént- y. “The ex-president is a vaudeville fan and attends every Saturday night,” confided Manager -Robbins. “There is nothing he likes b than comedy. Even the slap-st: riety amuses him.” Very often, as Wilson is being as- sisted from his auto in the alley, be will say to Robbins: “Got plenty of fun in the bill this week? Ah, that’s good.” STRAUS SEES Pl of Rock Island . | bronchial trouble. France, ‘Itdly and the others and (2) Venizelos should be | recalled immediately and placed in power of }) Greece. v “And furthermore, if we are going to avoid another war, the Versailles treaty will have to be materially re- vised. This revision is possible on- ly if the "allied ‘powers come to prompt agreement. Only a solid | diplomatic front on the part of the allies can bring Kemal'and his forces to terms, : qe “It is a world calamity that we have not cooperated with the allies by joining the League of Natons. “Had we joined, thé present sit- uation, I believe, would not * have hrisen, As/things now stand,'it is wthin the réalm of probability that for enlightened selfinterest we may be compelled to take a part in pre- venting a wofld conflagration and in restoring peace. “And all this menacing condition finds its cause now, as in the past, in the opportunity given to the Turks by the mutual jealousy of | those who opposed them: The pres- ent lack. of concord between Great Britain, France and Italy emphasizes the fact'that'the ‘Treaty of Versailles was in’ many respects. unwise and was stimulated by a‘spirit of revenge rather than by that of calm and for- ward-looking: statesmanship.”~ LICENSE 107 YEARS OLD. Rock Island, IN, Sept. 23.—A’ mar- riage licenge: 107 years oldi; in’ pos: session of .Mr and Mrs, J, B. Jones It, announces the marriage of Mr. Jones grandparents, Martin Jones and Margaret Watton, over a’ century ago in what now Sangamon county: The marriage took place Nov. 28, 1815, in a fort near the present’ site of the state capital. The old license fs written in Eng: lish script, and bears the seal of John Springer, justice of the peace. The wording is as follows: E is a maridge intended betwéen Mar- tin Jones and Margaret Hatton on the 28 day of Ne vember, 1815, giv- en under my hand and Seal the 23 day of November 1815, USED BY THREE GENERATIONS. “I use Foley’s Itoney and Tar. per- sonally, give it to all my, children ‘and now to'my grandchidren with the r|'same good results I tried many kinds of cough medicines, but never want anything but Foley’s Honey and Tar,” writes Mrs. E:; K. Olson, Superior, Wisc. Foley’s Homey and Tar’ was established in 1875 and has stood the test of time serving three gener- | ations, It quickly relieves colds, eoughs and croup, throat, chest and “Notis is hear by ‘given, tliat there: Adv.} he toJd his lawyer. “It was all right iowns, lighthouses, rivers and easi- E 0, JACOBS, General secretary ARE IMPULSES TO SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1922 By Alexander Herman Mineola, N. Y., Sept. 23.—Is Oscar) j Wilde’s famous, ‘Ballad ‘of Reading} Gaol’ to find its ¢ erpart in the tragic life story of young and good- ' looking William Creasy, now on trial for the slaying of his fiancee, Miss Edythe. E. Lavoy, the pretty 22-year- old school teacher? Here in\the Nassau county court-| the | testimony of the famous Carmen ant} De Saulles trial sits the man around whom the district attorney is trying | room which once echoed with to weave a mesh of testimony, based on his psychology which Wilde ob- served during-his prison days: “Yet each man kills the thing he loves, By each let this be heard. Some do it with a bitter look, Some with a flattering word; The coward does it with a kiss, The ‘brave. man with a sword.” “He killed because he loved,” says the district attorney. “He couldn’t Rill because he loved,” says the counsel for the defense. The jury will decide and on the de- cision hangs the life of the prison- er, Creasy met Miss Lavoy while he was in the navy. She had just come down from Tupper Lake, N. Y., teach: school in Long Island. “Friendship,” says Henry A. Uter- hart, Creasy’s lawyer, “ripened into love, Their engagement was soon announced.” Difference Appears ‘The young sailor went north to ‘meet his bride’s family. On his discharge, he returned to his home at Covington, Ky., and ‘went back~to.work as a mechanic in a-car and foundry shop. Miss Lavoy went on teaching in a Fregport school. hey wrotg-to each other regular- ly. Her letters were fervent, neatly written and choicely worded. His let- ters. were just as warm, but the handwriting was poor and the gram- mar bad. “Creasy began to realize,” his law- yer goes on, “that Miss Lavoy was}. above him culturally. He was just « mechanic without much schooling: she was a highly educated woman. “So he tried to catch up. He toox courses in a business school. But he found that the going was too hard.” Engagement Broken Slow thinking, but decided, Creasy finally made up his mind. “I couldn’t make Edythe happy.” to}. MISS EDYTHE LAVOY (ABOVE), WILLIAM CREASY (BELOW) AND (LEFT) MISS EVA, LAVOY, THE DEAD GIRL’S SISTER AND STAR WITNESS. while I was in the navy, but now that I was just a mechanic, I felt that I that I couldn’t give her—living in New York,.going to big affairs, Yale- Harvard football games and the like.” So last spring the engagément was broken. ny, But their letters continued. They still loved each other. “When there were rumors of a railway workers’ strike,” Uterhart explained, “Creasy decided to give up his. job and go to Canada. On thel way he stopped in to see Miss Lavoy.} He wanted to return to her some presents that she had sent him.” They were alone in the girl’s room in her boarding house when the trag- edy occurred. A shot from Creasy’s 32-caliber| pistol—and the school teacher was| dead. LOVE AND SLAY THE~ SAME? CREASY JURY MUST DECIDE was out of her class. She liked things |‘ he was napping on a couch, he sa the girl went to his pocket, took hi revolver, gand- shot herself in the right temple. Why? “She was despondent over her broken affair with Creasy,” says his, lawyer. “She loved, him too well.” But the district attorney says it was murder and Miss Eva Lavoy, the dead girl’s sister, agrees with him, She has come down from her home in Utica, N.°Y., to be the star Creasy says it was suicide. While witness against him. ly distinguished inlets. A compass of the American Y, M. C. A in| CAPTAIN ARTHUR J, HEPBURN, course is laid out om the chart in @ Symrna has reached Athens with| chief of staff to Rear Admiral Bris- direct line between the two points, | other American refugees Jacobs re-| tol, American high commissioner at which, in this instance is feasible, ports all Americans connected with although it is recognized that such the Y. MC. A, have been removed a course is not always practicable. | z Along with that course is laid out a| ¢° Places of safety. supplementary course which deviates | RES from the compass course only a few miles and.which follows the better terrain. | Landing fields sufficient to pro-| vide safe descent are shown. No at- tempt is made to picture features | By Robert Talley of the fields but towards the mar- | Washington, Sept. 23—When ee cei Te piclinested 37 | Woodrow Wilson goes to the theater ground is shown, together with the | vaudeville show— structures nearby, points of-danger,; | and general wind direction. On the | with the crowd—in the reverse side information aviator would need who was forced | down, is written out. - | ter, his secretary last Mrs. Wilson, her mother, her sis- secondary landing fields at distances | him. of about 25 miles, an endless line of| His auto stops in the alley along- ground markers, to be supplemented | side the theater, two attendants as- at night by lighthouses and the more’ sist him through a side door to his ambitious probram of wireless direc- seat which is only a few feet away. tion and meteorological information. | The audience stands, faces hira Another feature is the scale of dis-, and applauds as he comes in, hoo- tances along each side of the chart, | bling heavily on his cane; he smiles which will give the fliers his mileage | and bows in acknowledgment, and distance to go. acid do not always show this data. Instruments | | At Keith’s vaudeville theater the ——— | other night, I sat less than three 0 feet from the ex-president and wat- | NEWS BRIEFS | ched him enjoy the show. He was as happy as a kid at his first circus. . : a A female impersonator fooled him St. Louis—A temporary. injunc- | until he snatched off his wig at the tion issued last year restraining-in- | end of his act. terference with: street sales of! With amused. interest and —fre- Henry Ford’s DEARBORN INDE- | quent soft chuckles, he followed the PENDENT, was made permanent. songs and stories of a dapper young comedian. t Like jazz? Seems to be crazy about it. Patted his foot softly in keep- Chicago—Alderman John Lyle,! was made defendant in two suits of |WITH WOODROW WILSON | AT A VAUDEVILLE SHOW | Constantinople, superintended, the removal to safety of Americans caught in flame-stricken Smyrna, SPLIT AMONG THE ALLIES 5 (Continued from’ Page One; been~to take advantage of t! tagonism. “The present situation has devel~ oped because Turkey took advantage of the jealousy between Great Bri- antics through opera glasses, hand- ed to him by Mrs. Wilson. eee But what do you suppose tickled He doesn’t occupy a box. He sits, him most? row| One of those animated cartoons in such as | back, and on the extreme left aisle.! the movies, wherein a cat with high- ly flexible eyebrows and a long, nervous tail twitches his whiskers and stretches his neck like it was made of rubber. “Ho, ho, ho!” came Wilson’s soft deep-throated chuckles as the felfne | got chased by polar bears and was} threatened with sudden and terrible j extinction in a dozen different ways. eee oe This gag by Johnny Burke, soldier- comedian, got a good laugh from Wilson. “I was diggin’ a trench,” related Johnny, “when along comes a ca! tain and says: ‘Whadda you throw- in’ all that dirt out here on the ground for? . "Cause I ain't got no where else to throw it,’ I says ; back to him . . . Then he says tain, Italy and France. “A new world conflagration. may ensue unless Great Britain, Italy and France come promptly to accord. It wad their failure to act in concert that caused the present situation to | develop. 5 “Had the’ United ‘States joined the League of Nations, the domin- ant moral prestige of our country could have prevented the disagree- ment between the allies and, brought ; about an agrement in regard to Turkey. Then Greece would mot have dared to begin the war. “But Greece is immediately re- sponisble for the present cohdition. During the war that nation’ was un~ der the leadership of Venizelos, who proved himself one of ‘the foremost |} statesmen of the allied powers. Af- ter deserving so well of his country he was deposed and made an exile. “Had he been at the head of affairs Greece would not be in the plight she is in today. To escape from this plight, to avoid another world war, I would emphasize the neces- sity of these steps: ‘ (1) there must be immediate agreement between the ! allied _ powers: Great Britian, | iz article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week. | Will Effect Your Purse | have of intome taxes, and since there must be inflation it matters little whether it is caused by a tariff or by some other taxes.” There are other Republican: papers, notably | ‘the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, that declare that the legislation “is'a grave blunder, as dangerous | politically as it is economically.” The Buffalo ' Commercial does not hesitate to say that “in its opinion it is a bad bill,” which “will have the ef- fect of unwarrantably increasing the cost of liv- ing.” f Prominent Democratic newspapers all agree that the effect of the new tariff will be to increase the cost of living and to make Democratic votes this fall and two years hence. The Raleigh News & Observer is delighted with the New York Her- ald’s designation of the new bill as “the damn fool tariff” and adds “that is what the people will be calling it when they find that it imposes burdens of indirect taxation of $3,000,000,000 upon them and opens no markets for their surplus farm and factory products.” This news-feature in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, September ‘23d, is illustrated with cartoons depicting. various opin- A comparison between some of the schedules |! in the new tariff bill and those of the last two regular tariffs is the main feature of the leading It will give the reader a satisfactory idea of what the increases in prices, if any, will be in the fu- ture. __Many Republican newspapers insist that the new tariff laws will ward off such a period of hard times as would hace come after the enactment .of the Underwood tariff had it not been for the out- break of the great war. Already, says the Hartford Courant, “our markets are being flooded with cheap products from Europe and without a’ pro- tective tariff the flood would become.a deluge.” The Newark Sunday Cail argues that “except in isolated instances where the duty on one class of - goods is out of proportion to other duties, tariffs will not change the relative value of goods to an- other, that is, it will’not raise real prices.” Of course, this paper continues, it will add to infla- tion just as any tax would. “We are going to have both tariff: and income. taxes, but the more $100,000 for slander and libel as a result of his charges that coal deal- ers and operators fixing conspiracy. were in a price ing time with a jazz band that was part of a musical revue. The grotesque doll. dance of Ade- laide and Hughes, old-time vaudeville favorites, seemed to win his’ parti- citizens the past history of the city and the state. Ploughkeeksie, N. Y.—Daniel J. cular admiration. He watched their Gleason, referee in the Stillman di- vorce case, announced he would not | file his decision until late next week. | (Mrs. Wilson’s The main purpose of the new! brother, John Randolph Bolling) and style chart is to provide a number of /a secret service man accompany Mineola, N. Y.—Nineteen high | school seniors went on strike when | their class leader, Norman Smith, | was sent home following disagree- | ment with teachers. { f Honolulu—The Hawaiian Civie | Club denounced exhibitons given | under the name of the Ancent Ha- | waan Hula, as being indecent para- | dies, . | ~ -_— | St. Louis—Physician said Paul L. | Boehi, 25, who suffered a broken: neck four weeks ago, had a chance | for recovery. DIZZY SPELLS? | Walter Mann If You Have Heat Flashes or Smoth- W. B. Watson ering Spells, You Should Not D. W. Maratta Overlook One Word of This. H. R. Porter Winona, Minn—“At middle life 1 Asa Fisher was terribly distressed with heat! A. H. Myers flashes and smothering spells. 1' P. F, Malloy would become quite dizzy at times,! y too. I bought a bottle of Dz. ‘Johit Yegen Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and felt the benefit right away, so I kept on taking it until I was safely thru that critical period. It was really re-| markable how quickly Dr. Pierce's! Favorite Prescription relieved me of | all my distress and I came through middle life in excellent health. I praise this good medicine at every opportunity.”—Mrs. Rose Buse, 416 High Forest St. Write Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for free medical | advice or send 10c for trial pkg. of | tablets.—Adv. Thomas McCormack, attired in this pre-Volstead rig-out, captured \arst prize at the annual baby pa i tade in Coney Island, N.Y The Fist Kail Bak is the \ Its history parallels that of the city and it has ' shared in the vicissitudes, the trials and successes . which have marked the life of Bismarck. Today with capital and surplus of $300,000.00 and resources well over $2,000,000.00, it is experienced and equipped to care for the commercial requirements of Bismarck and Burleigh County. ‘ Dan Eisenberg John A. McLean John P. Hoagland Thomas McGowan G. H. Fairchild E. L. Strauss George Peoples C. R. Williams OSU SNDUERIAAAAVAGUUNOUEDUADADL UNL TAAADTIGNLFR, we have of a reasonable tariff the less we shall ions upon the tariff legislation. \ 5 “Fun created an immensely favorable impression. If Now \ you have not already enjoyed this new 5-minute laugh- Showing In ) 4 From maker, write or tell the management of your favorite eS = ies theater to show it. “Fun From the Press” is new each Leading the Press” week. Go to theaters showing it for it’s safe to assume Theaters THE DIGEST’S NEW MOTION PICTURE HIS NEW REEL NOVELTY, the only one pto- duced and sponsored by The Literary Digest, has - that the rest of the program will be of equal merit. Produced by ry Distributed by The Literary Digest W. W. Hodkinson Corporation: Other Timely News-Articles in This Week’s “Digest” Are: __Maine’s Missing Voters—La Follette for President ?—The Turk Again at Europe’s Gates—A New Attitude Toward the League of Nations—A Franco-German Industrial Alliance—France and Lloyd George — “Wet” Publicity That Quebec Resents——Japan’s Insurgent Farmers—Heart Trouble, The King of Diseases—An Animal. Garden of Eden—A Canadian Gary—Sending Photographs by Radio Code—A School of Detective Yarns Needed—How Our Newspapers Look to England—Butchery of Christians in Asia Minor—Shall the Daughters Work?—Prosperity Among Béggars—The Theater’s Doubting Thom- as—Topics of the Day—Many Interesting Illustrations, Including Cartéons. N Alt News-dealers—10 Cents Mothers of woe wins om ASK Their prehensive and Concise Standard Dictionaries in school ‘and at home? [t means quicker progress. "~

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